Guatemalans go to polls to elect president

Maria Tzujuel, 80, stands in front a sign indicating the location of a polling station in Santiago Atitlan, Guatemala, Saturday Sept. 10, 2011. The latest polls show the Patriotic Party candidate, Otto Perez Molina, a former general, heading into Sunday's presidential election as the frontrunner wi

/ AP

Maria Tzujuel, 80, stands in front a sign indicating the location of a polling station in Santiago Atitlan, Guatemala, Saturday Sept. 10, 2011. The latest polls show the Patriotic Party candidate, Otto Perez Molina, a former general, heading into Sunday's presidential election as the frontrunner with a 20-point lead over his closest challenger. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)

Maria Tzujuel, 80, stands in front a sign indicating the location of a polling station in Santiago Atitlan, Guatemala, Saturday Sept. 10, 2011. The latest polls show the Patriotic Party candidate, Otto Perez Molina, a former general, heading into Sunday's presidential election as the frontrunner with a 20-point lead over his closest challenger. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd) (/ AP)

JUAN CARLOS LLORCA, Associated Press

GUATEMALA CITY - Guatemalans go to the polls Sunday in a presidential election that may bring to power a retired military general who promises an "iron fist" in fighting crime in one of the world's most violent peacetime countries.

Violence is epidemic in this nation of 14.7 million people, and organized crime has overrun many regions. Guatemala has one of the highest murder rates in the Western Hemisphere at 45 per 100,000, according to a report by the World Bank.

If victorious, Otto Perez Molina, who lost to current President Alvaro Colom in 2007, would be the first former military leader elected president since democracy was restored in the country in 1986, after the military dictatorships of the 1970s and '80s.

His 2007 campaign for the right-wing Patriotic Party was nicknamed the "iron fist," but he softened his message this time around with more talk of social programs and "democratic security."

A U.N.-sponsored truth commission found that 200,000 people were killed in Guatemala's 36-year civil war, 93 percent of them by state forces and paramilitary groups. Nonetheless, many credit Perez as having played a key role in the march toward democracy, including negotiating the 1996 peace accords that ended the conflict.

Some 75 percent of Guatemalans live in poverty, and the indigenous and rural poor who were most hurt by the war are also bearing the brunt of the current violence.

In the most recent polls, Perez had the support of as many as 48 percent of voters, followed by businessmen Manuel Baldizon with 18 and Eduardo Suger with 10 percent. All are right-leaning.

Among a field of 10 candidates, the only leftist running is Nobel Peace Prize laureate and Mayan activist Rigoberta Menchu, who is only polling at little more than 2 percent.

Perez needs more than 50 percent of the vote to avoid a November runoff. The winner takes office in January.

Baldizon, a tycoon-turned-political populist, has promised to employ the death penalty, now rarely used, and to televise executions.

Suger, who built a network of private universities, is an open defender of neoliberalism, the policy of relying on private enterprise and a market-driven approach to economic and social problems, which also stresses liberalized trade and relatively open markets.

Perez's strongest opponent was barred from running.

Sandra Torres, Colom's ex-wife, was declared ineligible by the Supreme Court because the constitution bars family members of the president from running. Torres divorced Colom before declaring her candidacy, but the courts saw the move as a maneuver to evade the law.

Polls say about 11 percent of voters plan to submit blank votes. Torres asked voters to do so to protest her being barred from running.

Alvaro Velasquez, of the Central American Institute of Political Studies, said people are disenchanted with politics as a result of the Colom government, which promised to quell the violence with social programs.

"They expected the government of Colom to be the transformation, but he didn't even try to be strong," Velasquez said.